Tottenville and catcher George Kantzian are second in The Post's PSAL baseball rankings entering Saturday's championship game against No. 1 George Washington.Christina Santucci

There’s nothing surprising about this championship game.

While the PSAL Class A playoffs were full of upsets and Cinderella runs, longtime powers George Washington and Tottenville are the last two standing and will meet in the finals Saturday at MCU Park in Coney Island. That’s not the only game left in the baseball season – Martin Van Buren and John Bowne meets in the ‘B’ final on Saturday as well.

It was an action-packed week and we have all the details below as the season nears completion:

1. George Washington (21-0) (Last week: 1)

It’s funny how baseball works sometimes. Fernelys Sanchez was at the head of legendary coach Steve Mandl’s suspension for alleged recruiting, the player Lehman coach Adam Droz accused Mandl of recruiting, and of course he figures prominently in the Trojan’s PSAL Class A semifinal sweep of Lehman. He has the game-winning, two –run single in Game 1 and a possible game-saving catch in Game 2. It was a weekend the junior will remember for a long time.

If there is a better hitter in New York City than Kevin Krause, we have yet to see that player. The Stony Brook-bound senior, who had interest but far bigger programs but opted to stay local, put on an absolute show in Tottenville’s PSAL Class A semifinal sweep of Grand Street Campus. He went 5-for-6, walked twice, was hit by a better, had four RBIs and scored four runs. Oh, and he was bothering leg ailments, too. The America East Conference is getting a flat-out hitting machine.

Remind us if this sounds familiar. Grand Street enjoys a memorable regular season, is touted a city title contender, but falls flat in the postseason. If it does, it should – history repeated itself over the weekend in the PSAL Class A semifinals as the Wolves were swept by Tottenville. Losing to the defending champions was understandable, but not really showing up was a head scratcher.

Next Season complete

4. Lehman (17-4) (4)

The Lions were planning to get back to the city title game, George Washington just wouldn’t cooperate. Lehman was out-gunned in the PSAL Class A semifinals, though its lack of clutch hitting and loose defense didn’t help matters. Still it was another successful year for coach Adam Droz and is players just to get this far after losing so many integral pieces off last year’s club.

Next: Season complete

5. South Bronx (14-6) (5)

It’s a shame the Phoenix will be broken up after such a memorable year, the finest in a long time at The Bronx school. Only center fielder Kevin Victoriano and shortstop Danny Baez are back, as the rest of the team either graduates who will be at Mott Haven next year as several small schools within South Bronx move over. The group will always have this year to fondly remember – the two wins over James Monroe, 11-5 record in Bronx A East and quarterfinal finish.

Next: Season complete

6. Telecommunications (15-4) (6)

If not for a few unfortunate bounces, the Yellow Jackets would’ve shocked No. 3 Grand Street Campus and reached the semifinals for the first time in over a decade. It speaks the wonderful job Ed D’Alessio did with this young and inexperienced group, not only to get them to the quarterfinals, but to win Brooklyn A East after a 1-2 start. Though key seniors Jason Galeano and Michael Tejada – who came out of nowhere to become one of the city’s top outfielders – graduate, top pitchers Chris Lee and A.J. Serrano return. If we learned anything this spring, it’s that D’Alessio’s club will always contend, no matter what.

Next: Season complete

7. William Bryant (15-4) (7)

As upsetting as the Owls’ quarterfinal loss may have been – they led George Washington by two runs going to the sixth inning before falling 5-3 – Bryant shouldn’t forget its magical season. It included the Queens A West crown, finals appearance in the prestigious Monroe Tournament and final eight berth. With the Alvarez twins, Chris and Nick, returning, along with pitchers Lisando Ayala, Adonis Lao and Darlyn Valdez, the future is bright. The Owls should expect to at least be a quarterfinal team next spring, if not better.

Next: Season complete

8. James Monroe (14-4) (8)

One of the younger teams in Mike Turo’s three decades at Monroe got off to a fast start, but finished even slower, dropping three of its last five games to close the season. As always, the future remains bright for the Eagles, who could have a dynamic rotation next spring with Ricardo Parra, Daniel Checo and Inoel Nunez.

Next: Season complete

9. Taft (11-8) (9)

It’s pretty remarkable Taft was two runs shy of the PSAL Class A semifinals one year removed from the ‘B’ division. The accomplishment speaks to the work coach Charis Britt is doing at Taft and the toughness his kids showed after getting off to a slow start in Bronx A East. This on-the-rise program is certainly one to watch in the coming years.

Next: Season complete

10. Cardozo (17-1) (10)

Queens A East will be the Judges division to lose next spring as they have sophomore star Adrian Castano and junior shortstop Nicanor Luna, among several others, back. Cardozo felt a tad short of the quarterfinals this season, but should make the final eight next year.